Wilkes Land crater

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Wilkes Land crater is an informal term that may apply to two separate cases of conjectured giant impact craters hidden beneath the ice cap of Wilkes Land, East Antarctica. These are separated below under the heading Wilkes Land anomaly and Wilkes Land mascon (mass concentration), based on terms used in their principal published reference sources.

Wilkes Land anomaly

A giant impact crater beneath the Wilkes Land ice sheet was first proposed by R.A. Schmidt in 1962 on the basis of the seismic and gravity discovery of the feature made by the U.S. Victoria Land Traverse in 1959–60 (VLT), and the data provided to Schmidt by J.G. Weihaupt, geophysicist of the VLT (Geophysical Studies in Victoria Land, Antarctica, Report No. 1, Geophysical and Polar Research Center, University of Wisconsin, 1–123).[1] Schmidt further considered the possibility that it might be the elusive source of tektites from the Australasian strewnfield.

The hypothesis was detailed in a paper by J. G. Weihaupt in 1976.[2] Evidence cited included a large negative gravity anomaly coincident with a subglacial topographic depression 243 km across and having a minimum depth of 848 m.

The claims were challenged by C.R. Bentley in 1979.[3] On the basis of a paper by J.G. Weihaupt et al.,[4] Bentley's challenge was proven to be incorrect, and the Earth Impact Database (Rajmon 2011)[citation needed] has now reclassified the Wilkes Land Anomaly from a "possible impact crater" to a "probable impact crater," on the basis of Weihaupt et al.'s 2010 publication. Several other potential impact crater sites have now been proposed by other investigators in the Ross Sea, West Antarctica, and the Weddell Sea.[citation needed]

Wilkes Land mass concentration

Map of Antarctica showing Wilkes Land, with the crater conjectured by von Frese and team marked in red

The Wilkes Land mass concentration (or mascon) is centered at 70°S 120°E / 70°S 120°E / -70; 120Coordinates: 70°S 120°E / 70°S 120°E / -70; 120 and was first reported at a conference in May 2006 by a team of researchers led by Ralph von Frese and Laramie Potts of Ohio State University.[5][6]

The team used gravity measurements by NASA's GRACE satellites to identify a 300 km (190 mi) wide mass concentration and noted that this mass anomaly is centered within a larger ring-like structure visible in radar images of the land surface beneath the Antarctic ice cap. This combination suggested to them that the feature may mark the site of a 480 km (300 mi) wide impact crater buried beneath the ice.

Due to the site's location beneath the Antarctic ice sheet there are no direct samples to test for evidence of impact. There are alternative explanations for this mass concentration, such as formation by a mantle plume or other large-scale volcanic activity[citation needed]. If this feature really is an impact crater, then, based on the size of the ring structure, it has been suggested by von Frese's team that the impactor could have been four or five times wider than the one that created the Chicxulub Crater, believed to have caused the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.[6]

Because mass concentrations on Earth are expected to dissipate over time, von Frese and coworkers believe the structure must be less than 500 million years old, and also note that it appears to have been disturbed by the rift valley that formed 100 million years ago during the separation of Australia from the Gondwana supercontinent.[6]

These researchers therefore speculate that the putative impact and associated crater may have contributed to this separation by weakening the crust at this location. These bracketing dates also make it possible that the site could be associated with the Permian–Triassic extinction event.[6] The Permian–Triassic extinction occurred 250 million years ago, and is believed to be the largest extinction event since the origin of complex multicellular life.

Plate reconstructions for the Permian–Triassic boundary place the putative crater directly antipodal to the Siberian Traps, and von Frese et al. (2009) use the controversial theory that impacts can trigger massive volcanism at their antipodes to bolster their impact crater theory.[7]

However, there are already other suggested candidates for giant impacts at the Permian–Triassic boundary, for example Bedout off the northern coast of Western Australia, although all are equally contentious, and it is currently under debate whether or not an impact played any role in this extinction.

The complete absence of a well-defined impact ejecta layer associated with the Permian–Triassic boundary at its outcrops within Victoria Land and the central Transantarctic Mountains argues against there having been any impact capable of creating a crater the size of the hypothesized Wilkes Land impact crater within Antarctica at the Permian–Triassic boundary.[8][9]

See also

References

  1. Schmidt RA (1962). "Australites and Antarctica". Science 138 (3538): 443–444. Bibcode:1962Sci...138..443S. doi:10.1126/science.138.3538.443. PMID 17794921. Abstract. 
  2. Weihaupt JG (1976). "The Wilkes Land anomaly: Evidence for a possible hypervelocity impact crater". Journal of Geophysical Research 81 (B32): 5651–5663. Bibcode:1976JGR....81.5651W. doi:10.1029/JB081i032p05651. Abstract. 
  3. Bentley CR (1979). "No giant meteorite crater in Wilkes Land, Antarctica". Journal of Geophysical Research 84 (Sept. 10): 5681–5682. Bibcode:1979JGR....84.5681B. doi:10.1029/JB084iB10p05681. Abstract. 
  4. Weihaupt JG (2010). "Gravity anomalies of the Antarctic lithosphere". Lithosphere 2: 454–461. Abstract. 
  5. von Frese RR, Potts L et al. (2006). "Permian–Triassic mascon in Antarctica". Eos Trans. AGU, Jt. Assem. Suppl. 87 (36): Abstract T41A–08. Abstract. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Gorder, Pam Frost (June 1, 2006). "Big Bang in Antarctica – Killer Crater Found Under Ice". Ohio State University Research News. 
  7. von Frese, R., Potts, L., Wells, S., Leftwich, T., Kim, H., et al., 2009, "GRACE gravity evidence for an impact basin in Wilkes Land, Antarctica," Geochemistry, Geophysics, and Geosystems, v. 10.
  8. Retallack, G.J., A. Seyedolali, E.S. Krull, W.T. Holser, C.A. Ambers, and F.T. Kyte, 1998, Search for evidence of impact at the Permian–Triassic boundary in Antarctica and Australia. Geology. v. 26, pp. 979–982.
  9. Retallack, G.J., T. Greaver, and A. H. Jahren, 2007, Return to Coalsack Bluff and the Permian–Triassic boundary in Antarctica. Global and Planetary Change. v. 55, pp. 90–108.

External links

News related to Researchers discover giant asteroid impact crater in Antarctica at Wikinews (2006)

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